Grass Fed Beef


 

j biesinger

TVWBB Platinum Member
After reading a big book about meat appropriately named "The River Cottage Meat Book," I decided to investigate grass fed beef. Although the author makes some compelling ethical arguments, I was sold mostly on the taste an quality issues. Since I already had established a mental catalog of all the meat sellers at various local farmer's markets, I figured it would be a good project to work on this summer. I guess I was already kind of primed (no pun intended) to eat local meat before I even read the book.

So last week I started with localharvest.org and I was pretty excited to see a bunch of farms raising grass fed, angus beef that weren't too far from me. I shot a few an email, and one farm replied almost instantly. As luck would have it, a coworker knew of this farm (but didn't know they sold their beef retail) and happens to live near by and was planning on driving right by it on saturday. He figured he'd check it out and buy himself a roast and me a steak or two. Here I'm planning on spending most of the summer figuring this all out and instead, in mere days, I had local beef being hand delivered to me at work. I didn't get to see the farm first hand but they seem like one of the few people around that butcher their cows and have the meat cut into sub-primals (and further into roast and steaks) and try to have a selection of frozen cuts around all year long, which made it ideal for trying before buying larger quantities. Most of the other farms I've seen listed only sell sides, wholes, or 50 lb grab bags and only in the fall.

I requested one porterhouse hoping it would be a double cut (1.5") but ended up with two that were 1" (better than the scrawny .75" stuff I normally see in supermarkets). The meat was $7.70 a pound which compared to a local supermarket that sells prime, dry aged porterhouse for $16.99 a pound it was a relative steal. Each steak ran about a pound so the package was $14 and change.

Appearance wise, they were certainly a lot smaller than what I'm use to (but turned out to be a nice big portion for a hungry eater) and had a far amount of marbling despite being 100% grass fed and not corn finished. The rind of fat encircling the meat may have been a bit thicker but that's not that important unless you want to figure waste into the original price. The steak seemed to have been butchered weird because there was a bit of fat hanging down from the pointed end and there was a bit of meat hiding in the fat. It was like the butcher nipped the next sub-primal when he was taking this one off the carcass. Again it was of no consequence unless you want to count I'm paying porterhouse per pound for fat and random meat.

Taste wise, I was really impressed. I couldn't get over the fact that the fillet side tasted so much different that the strip side, and both had a rich, gamy taste that I've rarely experience with beef. I told my wife, while we were eating, that if there's better beef out there (and I'm sure there is) than I can't wait to try it.

I'm glad I heeded the tons of advice there is out there to "go local." I'm really eager to find other sources of beef and find some for pork. I think this has the potential to really improve the quality of my bbq. I can't wait to try a brisket and if its anything like these steaks, it'll be fun to use in a comp.

I'm interested to hear other stories about experiences with local meat. And for those of you that might need some incentive to go and try some for yourself...do it, you won't regret it.

I also received an additional link from Kevin. the site is called "eat wild" and it lists producers of grass fed meat by state.
 
Good read. Thanks. I've had a prime grass feed brisket, but not sure I'd go the the work and expense to make one again. I'd be happy if I could find a decent CAB packer nearby.
 
i dont have a local market like that but I read this w/ interest cause I do have a friend that raises hogs and cows. He gave me pork chops a while back and I actually prefer them about 3/4'' thick for a high heat sear on both ends and more doneness in the center.
Anyway its funny how different it is. I cooked em up on the grill nothin fancy, just a few things I threw on it and they were juicy like steaks or somethin' it got me so stoked about trying to look around local like you but nothing yet. In that sense I understand what your talking about and I actually don't understand the difference. I've rarely said... "mmm those pork chops were juicy" my girlfriend agreed, it was quite obvious they were much much better tasting and just overall. Thats a cool story up top. You should post if you get a brisket and cook it up and let us know, i'll watch for it.
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">In that sense I understand what your talking about and I actually don't understand the difference. </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

From the little I've read, it seems like the "you are what you eat" axiom applies heavily here. Animals are bred to get big fast and are fed high protein feed (soy), hormones and antibiotics. They become calorie converting machines. They aren't consuming anything with flavor and the grow so fast they never really develop any. Much of what they eat has flavors that can be absorbed into their fat tissue (something typical hogs and beef never have time to develop) and pork can even be nutty tasting if it was allowed to forage on acorns.
 
jb:

I'm thinking you're very fortunate. I've priced beef at a local farmers market and have found it to be 2-3 times more expensive than beef at my grocery store. Now, I don't often see grass fed beef at the grocery store, so an apples to apples comparison is dificult. But at less than 8 bucks a pound, I'd be buying those porterhouses like crazy!
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I guess it's time for me to do more research. Maybe the farm I was dealing with is just over priced.
 
I agree with Jim as when I have looked at this locally here in Chicago, pricing is about the same as a good butcher shop if not higher. Here is a local farm co-op that sells in the Chicago area:

MooGrass Farms
 
Man...If I could get those prices on GFB at a local farm, I'd flip! The numbers I see locally are at least twice that depending on the cut.
 
well, I'm looking for the best possible beef and pork eating experience possible. I don't mind paying more as long a I'm getting the best possible meat. I was a little wary of this stuff because it did seem fairly inexpensive, but it tasted good, and looked good.

I was comparing the experience with the coworker who bought the meat, and his comment was that it was easily the most tender steak he's eaten. He said once things warm up and he's getting his boat ready for charter fishing he'll be going by this farm weekly, so I'll be able to keep stocked.
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Appearance wise, they were certainly a lot smaller than what I'm use to (but turned out to be a nice big portion for a hungry eater) and had a far amount of marbling despite being 100% grass fed and not corn finished. The rind of fat encircling the meat may have been a bit thicker but that's not that important unless you want to figure waste into the original price. The steak seemed to have been butchered weird because there was a bit of fat hanging down from the pointed end and there was a bit of meat hiding in the fat. It was like the butcher nipped the next sub-primal when he was taking this one off the carcass. Again it was of no consequence unless you want to count I'm paying porterhouse per pound for fat and random meat. </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

J,
I too talked with Kevin about this last summer. My wife and I found a farmer raising grass fed organic beef. My first fear was price. We bought half a cow and ended up paying around $3.70/lb. I have seen people pay lots more for regular beef.
Your description of the beef is is almost exactly what ours looked like minus the bad trim job.
I was so pleased with the beef we have ordered a hog from the same farmer. I cant wait to see if there is a difference!
Thanks
rick
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">I was so pleased with the beef we have ordered a hog from the same farmer. I cant wait to see if there is a difference! </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

me too. I've found a few "hobbyist" that raise berkshires and tamworths but so far I haven't gotten responses to my initial emails. Where as beef pretty much came to me, I think I'm going to have to work some for pork and poultry. The farm that sold me these steaks also sells pork, but I think it might be a more typically breed as they don't list it as anything other than "pork" where as they go into lengthy descriptions for their beef.

I'm probably more likely to get a side of a hog because I want the belly. I'm not so sure about a side of a cow because I don't use much stew meat or ground beef.

Most of the stuff I've seen for chickens was pre-order, seems like the demand out weights the supply. One place lets you adopt a hen for the summer and she supplies you with fresh eggs, in the fall you get to eat her.
 
Nice post J. I made the conversion about 6 months or so ago...local farmers market has 2-3 providers of local, grass fed beef. While not as fork tender as some I've had the taste one just cannot compare to industrial big-box meat. As for that extra piece - the tail, I used to see that quite often many years ago, seems like most modern butchers cut that off...maybe your guy is really old school.
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">...it seems like the "you are what you eat" axiom applies heavily here...Much of what they eat has flavors that can be absorbed into their fat tissue (something typical hogs and beef never have time to develop) and pork can even be nutty tasting if it was allowed to forage on acorns. </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

This thread got me thinking...I wonder what I'd taste like. Definitely not fishy or leafy. Probably spicey, nutty, and hoppy
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Todd
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Nice post J. I made the conversion about 6 months or so ago...local farmers market has 2-3 providers of local, grass fed beef. While not as fork tender as some I've had the taste one just cannot compare to industrial big-box meat. As for that extra piece - the tail, I used to see that quite often many years ago, seems like most modern butchers cut that off...maybe your guy is really old school. </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

Interesting info, I'll bet its more of a case of them sending the cows out to be processed and the processor doing as little custom trimming as possible and the farmer selling it as is to max their margin.

I was very happy with both the taste and tenderness. I picked up a tip from Kevin. He suggests letting the meat come to room temp to allow some internal enzymatic action to break down the meat. Unfortunately, these things were frozen like a brick and took all day to thaw, I doubt they warmed up much for this effect to take place, but they were still very tender.

<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content"> This thread got me thinking...I wonder what I'd taste like. Definitely not fishy or leafy. Probably spicey, nutty, and hoppy Smiler

Todd </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

I'm thinking I probably taste like hot sauce, blue cheese and fryer grease.
 
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by Todd Randall:

This thread got me thinking...I wonder what I'd taste like. Definitely not fishy or leafy. Probably spicey, nutty, and hoppy
icon_smile.gif


Todd </div></BLOCKQUOTE>

Cabernet and Elija Craig, with subtle tones of hickory and applewood.
icon_smile.gif
 

 

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